We are dedicated to presenting candid environmental information on issues ranging from toxic chemicals to impacts from climate change. Dr. Milton Clark's work with U.S. EPA and the University of Illinois has helped resolve PCB pollution problems in the Great Lakes region, reduce exposure to toxic pesticides, and provide talks and strategies to mitigate climate change. Contact Clark Environmental Consulting for help with evironmental assessments, risk analysis, and expert testimony.

Saturday, November 19, 2011

The magical Garden Island of Kauai is calling me again, this time for six months or more. One of the few places left on this earth where the natural beauty, tranquility, and people can come into perfect balance. You get up with the sun, pass by a dozen waterfalls, run barefoot on the beach, take a swim, crawl under an umbrella with the noon sun day beaming overhead, as a cool breeze blows. It is as close as humans get to nature's paradise. (Of course through meditation paradise can be found going inward....but that is a topic for another time).

Back to Kauai to wrap up a book, start another one, and see what it might be like to live in a place overlooking the Pacific Ocean, while the humpback whales play and give birth in their wintering place. Then to my beach...Ke'e beach...at the end of the road where you can see endless ocean to the west or the magnificent, rugged Na Pali coastline to the south...or swim with gentle sea turtles while snorkeling. And yes, it is possible to still do environmental consulting!

Yet climate change is happening rapidly and Kauai cannot escape it. Paradise is on borrowed time. We know for a fact that coral reefs are rapidly dying off due to greenhouse gases that spew from our gas guzzling cars or the fossil fuel power plants that produce the electricity that light our homes. In two generations most of the reefs and fishes they support will be gone on Kauai...and sadly all over the world. Likely, the dozen or more waterfalls that spring forward after a Kauai rain on the north side will be fewer in number as world rainfall patterns shift. Texas experienced the worst drought, temperatures and fires in history....exactly what is expected with climate change decades into the future. Yet it is already happening now. And there will be more droughts, floods, crop losses, and disease. All because humanity does not have the will to combat the pollution causing climate change, which will leave future generations an irreversibly degraded world.

So my last environmental cause will be giving lectures on climate change and making people aware of the issue....like the great champion Al Gore is doing... whom I had the pleasure to hear and meet recently. Turn off your TVs, get off the sofa, and do something to make the environment a better place for your children's, children's children.

About Me

Dr. Milton Clark worked for 30 years as a environmental scientist with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and as an Adjunct Associate Professor of Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences at the University of Illinois School of Public Health. Dr. Clark has led efforts to evaluate and solve some of most challenging toxic chemical problems at large Superfund sites in the Great Lakes region. Dr. Clark is an expert on the health effects of toxic chemicals and the author of over a 150 technical reports and publications in the field of risk analysis. He is the recipient of three EPA national gold medals for excellence in environmental protection. He is the recipient of Outstanding Teacher of the Year Award at the University of Illinois School of Public Health. Dr. Clark also specializes in communicating complex environmental information in simple terms to the general public and media.